Ration Balancing Basics

Ration Balancing Basics

Regardless of your production goals – maintenance, growth or finishing – keeping the ration simple may be your best bet for reaching your target. There is no need to make things difficult and include every ingredient under the sun.

Start with a high quality forage and then add in supplements to fill in the nutritional gaps.

“Ration balancing is a complex topic that can be intimidating but the best designed feed mix (or ration) is the simplest one,” write Dr. Benjamin Wenner and MacKenzie Dore in the Ohio State bulletin Basic Ration Balancing. “Some diets are intended to be a standalone ‘complete mixed feed.’”

Of course, the ration needs to take into account the location of the operation and other factors that influence the diet, like the animals raised, available feeds and facilities. But with these in mind, the rest is about sticking to the nutritional fundamentals built around what works best for you.

Forages First

Forages are one of the most important – and cost effective – bovine dietary staples. But its effectiveness is only as good as its quality.

Neutral detergent fiber, or NDF, is a primary indicator of forage quality, as it measures the amount of indigestible cell wall material. Total digestible nutrients, TDN, are the total nutrients in forage that can be utilized by the animal.

While there are many other ways to measure quality, these are the two most basic, simplest assessments and can pair well with a visual examination.
To calculate the most accurate diet, it’s optimal to have forage sampled before balancing the ration whether you are doing a full total mixed ration, utilizing pasture or offering free choice hay.

Selecting Key Ingredients

When selecting or evaluating the ingredients in any ration, there is always the consideration that each is multifactorial. This is because dry matter intake (DMI) is based on the animal, the environment and the diet.
The main components of a ration often take into consideration ingredient availability, accessibility and affordability.

At times, there will be tradeoffs. For example, cow-calf operations that go with seasonal waves will find that they are always paying more for nutrition in the winter when requirements go up and additional resources are needed.

Feeding programs on the other hand aren’t subject to as much seasonal swings and they rely less on forage.

Providing a Nutritious and Digestible Source

Cereal grains are utilized as concentrated sources of energy, particularly in finishing rations where they comprise up to 90% of the ration dry matter. Additionally, they are an important contribution to the protein needs of growing and finishing cattle.

“Digestibility of grains like corn, barley and oats is improved when grains are processed. Processing methods such as steam flaking have been shown to improve feed efficiency versus dry rolling. By cracking the outer shell of the grain, rumen microbes are better able to utilize grain starch and minerals,” reads a 2023 Beef Cattle Research Council (BCRC) bulletin Optimizing Feedlot Efficiency. “Processing also allows grain to be mixed with supplements, and affects palatability and passage rates. However, processing grains too finely leads to acidosis. Finding the ideal method and level of processing contributes to an improved F:G (Feed to gain ratio).”

About Ionophores

Ionophores are a popular additive to rumen diets. They are antimicrobials that improve the animal’s nutrient availability and include products like monensin, lasalocid, and laidlomycin propionate.
By acting on the rumen microbes, they improve feed efficiency.

“Most rumen microbes convert the complex fiber and starch in forage and grain into simple molecules that can be absorbed into the bloodstream to provide energy and protein to the animal,” reads the BCRC bulletin.

“Ionophores improve feed efficiency and weight gain by selectively inhibiting methanogenic bacteria, and allow the beneficial rumen bacteria to make more feed energy available to the animal.”

All About Timing

Timely feed delivery is crucial, especially on cow-calf operations. Consistent feeding ensures optimal calf growth and cow health, particularly when pasture quality is insufficient.

Typically, the faster the animal is expected to grow, the more it will require dietary energy (from starch, carbohydrates, or fats) and protein. Younger animals consume less feed each day and thus usually require a greater percentage of key nutrients such as proteins in their diet. Younger animals only require a greater concentration of protein because they consume less total feed. It is common to see protein in the diet decrease andbe replaced by more energy as the animal matures and consumption increases.

In finishing situations, cattle should start at a DMI of 1.5-2% of their body weight and create uniform pens to ensure the right rations are being provided to the right group. Intake should never be increased the same day of a diet switch/change.

Starting out, the concentrate

forage ratio will be around 6:4 and as the animals progress the concentrate proportion will increase while the forage decreases.

“Substituting forage with grains in finishing rations can lead to substantial improvement in feed efficiency. Steers fed higher grain diets grow faster, finish sooner, and produce heavier and fatter carcasses,” says BCRC.

“Research also suggests that the type and quality of grains and the balance of essential nutrients, like vitamins, proteins, and trace minerals, significantly impact feed efficiency. Balanced rations increase average daily gain and can decrease feed cost per pound of gain. In order to prevent rumen acidosis and liver abscesses, it is necessary to appropriately adjust cattle from forage-based feed to high-energy grain-based rations.”

If nutrition isn’t your wheelhouse, ration balancing can seem cumbersome and overwhelming. It’s one of the many reasons several operations opt to work with a qualified nutritionist. But whatever the situation, having a rudimentary understanding of ration basics can ensure nothing falls between cracks throughout all stages of production.

Home – American Cattlemen

Here is an interesting article on how to supplement Cattle through the winter

Supplement Cattle Through Fall and Winter 

Here is the Dairy Side of things

Home – American Dairymen

Or if you enjoy the Outdoors, that could be hunting, fishing, or just recreational outdoor activities the Iowa Sportsman is a great option

Home – Iowa Sportsman

A Longstanding Impact

A Longstanding Impact

When life gets going pretty fast, you kind of forget some of the little things that led to where you are.” – John McDonald, founder of Rawhide Portable Corrals.

The longstanding history of Rawhide Portable Corrals and the impact John McDonald’s invention and ingenuity has had on the cattle industry is profound. Nearly 25 years ago, McDonald developed of the first portable hydraulic corral on wheels, with multiple pens and 200-head capacity. Fast forward to today, and McDonald is still going strong – developing new, innovative products that help producers do their jobs more efficiently, effectively, and more safely.

Throughout the years since his original invention, McDonald’s portable corral has captured the attention of many throughout the cattle industry, especially as Rawhide has evolved to offer multiple corrals and additional unique product features that have earned the company a solid reputation in the industry.

“I got my initial ideas about a portable corral when I was doing equipment setups for the televised bull ridings,” McDonald says. “I have been a cowboy all my life. Whe getting on things that bucked when I was four years old and continued to be around rodeo through my adult years, learning from the best. For not growing up on a cattle operation, I guess I just have some kind of an innate knack for how cattle and livestock work through equipment.”

When McDonald would help with the televised bull riding setups he became familiar with what was needed, constantly looking at things for safety and speed and to make the flow of cattle work well.

“I was around a lot of good rodeos, good stock contractors, good setups and I think my mind took note on all those places and things that I was around,” McDonald says. “I was in Chicago, setting up at Rosemount Horizon for bull riding. We had 80 bulls being brought in that I had to see that they were housed and didn’t get away in the center of a city. There was not one saddle horse around, because the promoters in the early days didn’t want to spend the money to have a saddle horse. They figured, you know, it’s a bull ridings in a small arena, we don’t need to rope anything. So I think the concern in my mind for safety and to keep something jailed, so to speak, made me think about the concept of a portable corral and work at it a little bit harder.”

When McDonald first brought his portable hydraulic corral to fruition, there was only one similar product on the market. McDonald honed his initial design to have standout features that incorporated insights from cattlemen and producers in the industry – those who have a first-hand understanding of the features needed that would make their jobs easier and safer. Throughout the years McDonald has embraced the continuous improvement process to refine the Rawhide Portable Corral into a product that new generations of cattle producers have come to expect.

“I was so excited when I invented Rawhide and I developed something that one person could do, that one person could set up in 10 minutes to catch hundreds of cattle,” McDonald says. “And unfortunately, because the one that existed before me, the only one, it was hard for me to get all the patents that I wanted, because it was considered prior art. I managed to not infringe. But because it was prior art, it makes it hard to get patents.

Today, there are about 10 portable corrals on wheels in the United States, and they’re all my design. What I continue to do, though, is I’m constantly covering all aspects of it for safety and for the animals to stay housed. I’ve had sleepless nights over this invention, constantly trying to make it better.”

It is McDonald’s continuous innovation that captures the attention of those in the cattle industry. Not only has Rawhide changed the cattle industry for the better – by providing a streamlined means for capturing and containing cattle, but it has helped keep animals and cattle producers safer along the way.

Today, Rawhide Portable Corral customers can choose from a series of different models, including the Classic, the Processor, and the Rancho Deluxe. While the chosen size will depend on the number of cattle being managed, each of these systems boast a hydraulic jack, self-contained power unit and battery with a solar charger, and the ability for the entire system to be driven through with a bale or cube feeder. In addition, the corral system can handle pulling at the speed limit, thanks to McDonald developing an innovative torsion suspension.

“Other than stock trailers that people haul their cattle with, I’ve got the only piece of livestock equipment that you can pull down the highway that actually has a patented torsion suspension,” McDonald says. “Most livestock equipment just have axles on them because people are not traveling very far. But Rawhide has customers that have cattle in three different states, and I felt the need for a solid suspension system. I learned, after several years of building this, that folks were driving up and down the highway with my product, and there was some fatigue on the axles – not just on the highway, but customers were driving way too fast in their pastures. So I invented this patented torsion suspension axle.”

That’s also one of the reasons McDonald continues to make Rawhide Portable Corrals better – continuous improvement and operational safety and security is truly the “name of the game” at Rawhide.

“Throughout the years we have seen the competitors cheapen up their models and create bad news for our product, so we have to flood Rawhide’s market with good news about new revelations and new designs,” McDonald says. “I take care of my customers from coast to coast and in Canada. I’m in the livestock equipment industry, and there are not that many of us and we have our fraternity of folks that do this. Nearly everyone on the planet has a refrigerator and a washing machine, but not everyone has a portable corral. So I take it more personally, and I try to work at it more deliberately to provide products that enhance our way of life.”

In addition to Rawhide’s portable corral systems, McDonald has also developed a portable Windbreak, which can withstand 50+ mph winds and also has a built-in loafing shed and calving pen option. The portable, foldable, windbreak is on wheels and, like the Rawhide Portable Corral, can be set up by one person.

In designing the new portable windbreak system, McDonald was striving to develop a solution that would protect animals from extreme weather conditions, resulting in less cold stress and less heat stress on livestock.

“I’ve done my due diligence to try to cover as much as possible with this windbreak, just like I did the corral,” McDonald says. “Besides the fact that it’s that long of a windbreak that’s braced, I have a roof on it, on the center where the mainframe is that serves as the trailer. So you can hydraulically, with the press of a button, raise the roof, and you have an 18×24 foot-long lean to that calves can get under in bad conditions as well.”
As history has proven, McDonald’s continuous vision for improvement of his products, as well as developing new innovations to enhance the cattle industry, is never-ceasing.

“I do have some things that I’m going to do in the future, including enhancing the framework of Rawhide a little bit more,” McDonald says. “I’ve built thousands of corrals, and I have had hundreds of people tell me that this made the difference in whether they stayed in or got out of the cattle business. They might not have a thousand head of cattle, but they’ve got 200 head of cattle and they don’t feel like they can afford to hire a full-time guy to help them with their cattle. So they still do everything. I get that from folks all the time – ‘We were going to get out of the cattle business if it wasn’t for your portable corral and we don’t know what we’d do without it now.’ It really flattering when I hear that, as that was my intention from the beginning.”

By Maura Keller

Home – American Cattlemen

Here is an interesting article on dystocia

Dystocia Prevention and Control

Here is the Dairy Side of things

Home – American Dairymen

Or if you enjoy the Outdoors, that could be hunting, fishing, or just recreational outdoor activities the Iowa Sportsman is a great option

Home – Iowa Sportsman

Wintering Calves and Late Weaning

Wintering Calves with their Mothers – Late Weaning

Many stockmen calve in the spring and wean in the fall. This works well for those who calve in February-March, or seedstock producers who calve in January to have bull calves old enough to sell as yearlings in a spring bull sale. Today, however, a growing number of producers are trying to calve in sync with nature, calving later in the spring, on green grass. This puts calving at a time when cattle don’t need hay, and weather is better for newborns.

Calving in May-June works great, but then there’s the question of when do you wean the calves? They are a bit young for traditional weaning in October/November so some producers are leaving calves with the cows into winter, weaning in February or March. There are advantages to leaving calves on their mothers longer, even through the winter, especially if calves are born in May-June. The calf develops a more efficient rumen if he can nurse mama until he is about 10 months old, according to the late Gearld Fry, a stockman in Arkansas who studied cattle nutrition and genetics for many years.

Grass production is the basis for cattle-raising; almost all cow-calf operations depend on grass. Yet this fact isn’t emphasized enough in today’s cattle industry. The type of animal that feedlots want—that they can make money on—often won’t make as much money just on pasture because they are wrong body type. Fry pointed out that today most stockmen must change their cattle genetics and their management, if they want to be profitable with grass.

“To become most efficient at digesting forage, a calf needs to stay on his mother for ten months so the rumen can develop to optimum potential. The cow’s butterfat—not the milk—is what enables the villi in the rumen to fully develop. If the calf doesn’t get the butterfat for about 10 months, his digestive ability is inferior to what it would otherwise be,” said Fry.

It is important for the cow to help feed the calf for the first winter of its life. “You cannot feed calves a man-made feed or supplement that can equal what the cows will give them. The dam’s milk is designed for her calf.

Young animals need proper nutrition at the right stage of their lives. There is a window of opportunity for each part of the body to develop. When that window closes, it’s all over. There’s nothing more you can do to make that animal develop,” Fry said. An example is growth of leg bones in the young animal; after puberty the cartilage/growth plate at the ends of the long bones stops forming new bone, and height growth is halted.

Mother Nature programmed cattle, like bison, to spend the first winter with their mothers. “You cannot do as much for a calf through winter as his mother can. Even at the expense of the cow’s body condition, you are still better off to let her feed that calf. If she isn’t calving again until May or June, it doesn’t matter if she loses 200 to 300 pounds from her summer weight. If she has 45 days of green grass before she calves again, she will put on enough body condition to have a healthy calf and breed back again within about 85 days after calving,” he explained.

There isn’t much nutrition in dead grasses—especially tame pasture grasses—once they mature, dry out or freeze. “Whether it’s stockpiled grass or hay, it still contains all its micronutrients but has very little actual energy. It doesn’t take much energy, however, for a cow to produce butterfat; all she needs is adequate digestible fiber.” Her rumen creates energy during breakdown of fiber.

“In the lactating cow during dead of winter, 75% of the fluid her udder produces is butterfat rather than milk,” he explained. She produces less volume than she would on green grass, but the quality is very high.

“Another thing most cattlemen rarely think about is the protein in the milk. In the beef cow the ratio is about 1 to 1. In other words, if 4% of her milk is butterfat, about 4% of it is protein. When her milk has that balance, it enables the calf to develop properly—the perfect diet for that calf. There was a book written in the 1700’s, called The Milch Cow, that mentioned this, and this concept was taught in universities until about 1920 when “new” science put all the traditional wisdom aside,” said Fry.

Bison are the most closely related wild animal today to cattle. They calve in April, and breed back quickly. Two estrus cycles is all Nature gives them. If they don’t get pregnant, they skip a calf. Their estrus cycles, along with the bulls’ testosterone production and peak fertility is seasonal. By contrast, domestic cattle have been selectively bred for certain desired traits; they have been gradually changed for several thousand years, and will breed (and calve) year round.

“Cattle are ruminants with a 9-month gestation, like bison. If we imitate nature and calve during April and May like bison, and let the calf stay at mother’s side through winter, all she needs is 45 days to dry off and prepare for the next calf with adequate colostrum, and then breed back,” said Fry.

“If she calves in mid to late-April, you would be breeding in June and early July. Then you would wean the calf the end of February or early March—whatever time it takes to give her 45 days to dry off and be ready to calve again. When you wean the calf, you’d give him the best hay you have, until there is green grass for him.”

Canadian Ranchers Try Wintering Pairs

John and Deanne Chuiko are on a 3000-acre ranch (CJ Ranching, in Saskatchewan) homesteaded by John’s grandfather in 1941. This is a cow-calf and yearling operation, with the yearlings summered on grass.

“We are a grass-based operation. We mimic Nature as best we can, and try to learn more every day,” John said. Their cow herd has been moving genetically toward more efficient and productive animals that perform well on grass. John and Deanne want cows that fit their operation, focusing on dollars per acre instead of dollars per head. They’ve found that moderate-frame cows work best in their operation.

“We want cows to be about 1100 to 1200 pounds—with lots of body and not as much leg. They need to thrive on forage; we’ve gone many years now without feeding any starch to our cattle. It not only makes more sense financially but because we raise grass (and not grain) we want cattle to do well on forage. We have mainly brome grass and hay and whatever else Nature gives us,” John says.

“We’re trying to take our eyes out of the selection process, and let Nature do the sorting to select cows that fit our environment. There is a certain body type that seems to work well, and the cows in our herd are evolving to that.”
Their cows calve in May-June, on grass. “We leave pairs together through winter and wean in late March or early April when calves are about 10 months old. We heard Steve Campbell give a talk about Gearld Fry, who recommended keeping calves on the cow for 10 months. Talking about the advantages of forage and mother’s milk, rather than weaning earlier and put on a concentrate ration. Keeping calves on the cows longer helps calves mature at an earlier age and they require a lower percentage of their mature body weight in feed for maintenance, over their lifetime,” John says.

“This is how all wild animals do it. Deer and elk in our area have their yearlings with them. They stay with mom through winter and even after she has her new babies. So we decided to try this with our cattle,” he explains.

“We have young cows that grew up this way, and it’s been gratifying to see how well they perform. When calves stay on their mothers longer, there is no sickness during winter.” They stay in family groups, are not confined, and not stressed, and thrive.

“For us, the most expensive time is winter, and the cheapest feed is summer grass. We want our calves to gain the most weight on grass and not on hay that we have to put in front of them in winter. We don’t want to use much hay. They are growing their frame on hay and milk, and we don’t give them any starch. They do nicely on hay and mama’s milk and are very content. Mom is educating her baby on what it takes to survive on our ranch,” John says.

Calves mimic mom and do what she does. “We bale graze the cows and when we let them into a new area they may eat on those bales for a while and then go out to graze if the snow isn’t too deep. They keep grazing when they can; mom is educating her baby on how to find grass.”

The cows have access to water whenever they want it, but they also lick snow. If they are out grazing and don’t want to walk to water, they just eat snow, and the calves learn to lick snow, following mom’s example. Licking snow is a learned behavior; many cattle that have no role model to follow are slow to learn how to use snow.

There is no stress for calves during winter; they are happily staying with mom and doing what she does. “When we wean in late March or early April, many of those cows have dried up already. As they get closer to calving again, Nature is telling them it’s time to wean the current calf. Their milk flow is dropping off and they may refuse to let the calf nurse. Mom is just there for moral support; the calf stays with her but soon gives up trying to nurse.” The cow may move away or won’t stand still for the calf, not allowing the calf to suckle.

“When we pull the calves away from the cows, there’s not much stress—very little bawling or pacing the fence. Many of those calves are no longer nursing.” They are very independent by that age and don’t need mom for moral support.

“Those calves go to grass after weaning—after a short time on bale grazing until the grass is ready. There’s less labor involved through winter because the cattle are together with just one group to feed instead of two,” he says.

During winter the main goal for the calves is to grow their frame. “They might gain only a pound a day because they are simply growing and not getting fat. By the time they go to grass as yearlings that next spring they have the frame and the rumen capacity to bloom and put more meat on that frame,” John says.

If calves are wintered in a feedlot and get a lot of starch and then go to grass, there is a period in which they seem to go backward for a while because their rumen is not optimally developed for handling forage. Those calves adapted to eating grain and concentrate feeds and their rumen bacteria are not programmed for optimum digestion of forage. “By keeping calves with their mothers, on nothing but forage, we program them for a lifetime on our ranch, and for what they are going to eat. We need animals that fit our environment. When those calves hit green grass in the spring they gain weight immediately because their rumen doesn’t have to readjust,” he explains.

Nature programmed all grazing mammals to feed their young until such point that the offspring can handle adult feed. “They are learning everything from mom and eventually it’s just moral support from mom. We see this with multiple generations in the herd; the cow has her current calf and her yearling heifer. The family group often stays together.”

One of the biggest advantages of keeping pairs together through winter is that the calves stay healthier. “There is less sickness, so there’s hardly any cost or labor in taking care of sick ones. Medications today are expensive, and we don’t have that expense,” he says. Being confined and stressed when weaned at a younger age makes calves much more vulnerable to illness.

“Cattle are intended to be out on the land, making our soil and pasture better. And it’s just more natural to have the calves with mom, learning how to become a cow in our environment.”

The yearlings spend the summer on grass. Steers (and heifers that are not kept as replacements) are sold in the fall. “We’ve noticed that these yearlings gain a lot of weight from August through September-October. I think nature is preparing them for winter, telling them they need to put on as much weight as possible. Those last 2 or 3 months before cold weather they gain a lot, so in our program we keep them on grass until about the end of October. We try to sell them just before it gets cold.”

By Heather Smith Thomas

Home – American Cattlemen

Here is an informational article, Check it out!

Genomic Testing

Here is the Dairy Side of things

Home – American Dairymen

Or if you enjoy the Outdoors. Including hunting, fishing, or just recreational outdoor activities the Iowa Sportsman is a great option

Home – Iowa Sportsman

Skip to content